South-West plans 44-town rail network, seeks law review
The Director-General of the Development Agenda for Western Nigeria, DAWN, Mr Seye Oyeleye, has said the region will build railway to link 44 cities and towns in the six South-West states.
Oyeleye, who said this in Ibadan on Friday, identified the 1955 Railway Act which allowed only the Federal Government to build railway as an impediment to this vision, but stated that the DAWN had started “engaging the right people on this”.
Oyeleye said the fact that the Western Nigeria Security Network, codenamed Amotekun happened despite the initial objection was enough to convince anybody that the railway project would also be built in the South-West.
He said, oil revenues were fast dwindling and each of the region must think creatively to shore up their earnings.
Oyeleye also lauded the railway track being built by the Federal Government between Lagos and Ibadan, saying the project would further boost the economy of Oyo state and even the neighbouring states.
He stated that investors would no likely go to places that were not accessible.
“We need a country that is structured along the line of development. With the revenue sharing formula that we operate now, the states will perpetually be under the Federal Government.
“If railway track is built to connect to the South-West, 44 cities and towns will be connected and those that designed it for us said when the project is done, the gross domestic product of this region will rise by over 50%. We need to confront anything that is not making this possible.
“We have tied ourselves to a constitution that is hindering development and this must change. It is in the interest of Nigeria that the South-West region should develop. If the region is developed, the Federal Government would make more money from here”.